Reviews
Canine Business Directories Fido Factor is a User-Generated Listing of Dog-Friendly Places

Dog-Friendly Places
Canine Business Directories Fido Factor is a User-Generated Listing of Dog-Friendly Places. If your dog is your hairy BFF, then Fido Factor, a US directory of dog-friendly restaurants and other places, may be a welcome tool. The Fido Factor site gathers user-generated content through its iPhone app and Facebook integration, then makes it—as well as photos of canines patronizing their favorite haunts—available online. The Fido Factor directory neared the 1,000 listing mark in July 2010 and will no doubt continue to grow as people learn about it. The goal of Fido Factor is to: To make dog friendly policies the norm rather than the exception. It’s our magical little dream that dogs will eventually be welcome everywhere! Provide dog owners with information on which places are dog friendly and how to visit each safely. Let the community determine which dog friendly spots are the best of the best.
MGMT’s recent album ‘Congratulations’ is a “grower”, according to one of the duo’s dad.

MGMT's recent album 'Congratulations' is a "grower",
MGMT’s recent album ‘Congratulations’ is a “grower”, according to one of the duo’s dad. The pair’s second album has had mixed reviews, but Bruce VanWyngarden, father of frontman Andrew, has urged fans to stick with it. VanWyngarden senior is the editor of newspaper Memphis Flyer, and has given readers his verdict on the album. “‘Congratulations’, MGMTs second album, is dense, lush, textured, difficult in places, absolutely euphoria-inducing in others. It is, as they say in the music business, a ‘grower’ — that is, repeated listens reveal more depth and complexity,” he wrote on his Memphis Flyer blog. “The lyrics blossom and begin to live in your head. The songs become earworms. It was the second-best selling album in the US last week. So yeah, I’m proud of my son.” He added: “This has been a completely biased report on a Memphis kid who’s doing pretty well in the music business.” Bruce VanWyngarden also admitted that his relationship to the band had made it difficult for his paper’s journalists to cover MGMT. “The growing notoriety of my son Andrew’s band, MGMT, has long been something of a dicey issue for the Flyer’s music writers,” he wrote. “I feel their pain. It’s a lose-lose proposition for them. If they are critical, they risk pissing off or at least irritating their boss. If they praise the band, it looks like they’re sucking up. No matter that MGMT has been praised and dissed and profiled by every major music publication and music blog around the globe, it’s still a ticklish deal for our guys.”
Supervillains and Philosophy: Sometimes, Evil Is Its Own Reward” by Ben Dyer

Supervillains and Philosophy
Supervillains and Philosophy: Sometimes, Evil Is Its Own Reward” by Ben Dyer The comic book world is full of equations, theories and principles that would rival the combined works of Isaac Newton and Albert Einstein. Many of these are unspoken postulates and chief among these is that for every great superhero there must also be a great supervillain, be it Lex Luthor to Superman, The Joker to Batman or the Green Goblin to Spider-Man. So says the foreword to the anthology “Supervillains and Philosophy: Sometimes, Evil Is Its Own Reward.” As part of the ongoing Pop Culture and Philosophy series, “Supervillains” picks up where predecessor “Superheroes and Philosophy: Truth, Justice and the Socratic Way” left off in discussing the battle between good and evil as found in the multi-paneled world of the glossy pages of comic books and graphic novels. Here however, contributors look specifically at the dark side, and no, we’re not talking about Darth Vader. Philosophical writers and comic book experts from all walks of life in academia and otherwise provide 19 essays worth of content on topics ranging from moral authority to the nature of existence to the application of science. Mad science, specifically. Like most entries in the Pop Culture series, there is a blend of classic philosophy and how it relates to modern topics, be they “Harry Potter,” “The Simpsons” or Bob Dylan. Here is no exception, as writers under editor Ben Dyer draw inspiration from Plato, René Descartes and Immanuel Kant, to name a choice few. Especially noteworthy is Andrew Terjesen’s thoughts regarding Plato student Aristotle’s definition of the term “magnanimity” and supervillain Doctor Doom’s embodiment of the idea of being nobly obligated to rule. As one of the top baddies of the Marvel Comics universe, the character of Doom has long been simultaneously renowned and criticized for being the archetypal European dictator with delusions of grandeur and plans of universal domination. Terjesen expands on this concept by questioning Doom’s role in the Marvel community and whether or not his intentions are basically good with negative outcomes. Such is the query of many essayists, as the word “utilitarian” keeps popping up again and again as they evaluate what truly separates a hero from a villain, particularly the motives of “X-Men” villain Magneto in fighting for the betterment of mutant life. Contributors to this work approach their writing in different styles, whether it’s a fictitious conversation, such as the chapter “New Wars, New Boundaries,” or a recount of certain character’s back stories, like “Two Fates for Two-Face,” a look at what shaped the psyche of one of Batman’s most well-known adversaries. There are numerous similarities between these topics and the ones found in “Superheroes and Philosophy,” as well as entries in the comparable Blackwell Philosophy and Pop Culture Series, including “Batman and Philosophy: The Dark Knight of the Soul,” “Watchmen and Philosophy: A Rorschach Test” and “X-Men and Philosophy: Astonishing Insight and Uncanny Argument in the Mutant X-Verse.” But there’s no lack of new issues to be examined alongside these previous texts, especially with the Marvel Comics “Civil War” miniseries and the film version of the villain-centric story “Wanted” making for poignant talking points. Whether you want a better insight into Brainiac, Venom, The Sandman and more, or you can’t get enough of Friedrich Nietzsche, “Supervillains and Philosophy” is as enjoyable a read as any Superman or Iron Man title. And there are so many more pages?
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